I took the feedback from the previous thread... it might still be considered a chore to deal with the pow-blocks, but there's a little more tension now, and the first two sections are designed to teach you the three things you'll need to know for the stage.

I ran out of objects or the stage would have been longer.https://supermariomakerbookmark.nintendo.net/courses/47C5-0000-01F1-D1B0

Here's a quick underwater level with pink coins and skewers. Less of a cohesive challenge and more of "hey, look at that.">Lost Cityhttps://supermariomakerbookmark.nintendo.net/courses/E441-0000-01F1-9AE0

>>330498808I played it and never finished it many times as a kid. I finally decided to finish it properly, racing with my brother and it was a really average ride. A mixture of enjoyment and incredibly dull grinding for health because of a lack of skill.

Back in 1989. It was one of the first things to help me learn how to read better. I'd pour over the manual with those beautiful illustrations, explore this massive world for rupees and items, and then get hyped for Friday for Zelda cartoon.

i played it in my late adolescence on an emulator. i was unimpressed. the biggest issue to me was how repetitive the dungeons were design wise, though that's obviously due to the limits of the nes system.

the best aspect of the game is uncovering secrets, and combat versus darknuts. otherwise i don't think it's too good. it seems to be a 'you had to be there' game, and i just wasn't out of the womb in time.

Rented SO2 back on the PSX and fucking loved it. I had a habit of never finishing RPGs, and SO2 was one of the few I actually focused on enough to make it all the way through. I recently acquired a copy, and despite being a little rough around the edges, the game is still good.

I was extremely pumped for SO3, but I barely made it past the first part of the game because I kept falling asleep while playing it, despite the fact that the actual combat was pretty neat. It also has a really big dumb twist that wound up retroactively ruining...Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.

Should I stick with Xbox because of me being an ex-achievement whore? I kinda like the list of games over the years with various achievements and it feels like a waste to abandon. Should I just give up and invest in a gaming PC?

despite the awful writing and cliche plot (seriously, a buddy-cop comedy with talking animals and political undertones? is that the best they could do?) so much attention to detail went into the vibrant cityscapes and architecture of this movie. parts of it felt like architecture/civic engineering porn. it made me really wish they could make a city building game that looked this good

why did the city building genre die? is it all EA's fault? will it ever return?